Sounds of Maui
29.01.2009 26 °C
I am sitting in our room at Dave and Uma’s upcountry home listening to the sweet sound of soft falling rain hitting the ti plant leaves right outside our window. It is a sound I wake up to most mornings, a sound which is soothing and lulls one back to sleep. It is a sound of Maui in winter which I will carry with me. There are other sounds which characterize our island’s stay. Very early in the mornings, really still in the dark of the night, the roosters start crowing. Here upcountry, they belong to every house and dwelling and most wander freely down the roads. Too many to count and they must be in strong competition on who can make the first sound-off for the approaching light and they cheat! Then there are the fighting roosters who are shackled to their own little crate on large fields with many other crates. I will not even attempt to find grace in the cruel activity called cock fighting which is another ancient, popular event on the island. On my morning walks through the valley I hear birds sing and dogs bark. Somehow I believe that the sounds of the guard dogs have changed from a hysterical frenzy to a friendly morning bark. I may be wrong but after all these mornings the neighbors have gotten to know me and we exchange friendly greetings so why would their dogs not have come to the same understanding? I pass by “our” home twice during my walk and hear the sound of Tom cracking macadamia nuts. He wore out the nut cracker and found two very fitting stones which do the job equally as well. While I am out meeting and greeting in the valley Tom finds projects like changing a mound of dirt and concrete dumped years ago into an aesthetically pleasing flowerbed. At Jan’s house Tom has spent many hours this past month adding another room to her house and taking care of other handy man’s jobs inside. When I hear the sound of the Mac.Cracker, I am reminded that I am married to a man who in his very own quiet and unpretentious way leaves there where he has been, always a better place. All over the island there is the sound of water. The gentle surf by which a beach nap can be taken or the wild pounding surf which whitewashes the rocks below where our tent is pitched and keeps us awake. This same surf gives great joy to many. I loved hearing the whooping of the surfers’ screech when catching a monster ride and listening to the cackle of laughter an elderly woman made over and over, each time her boogie board hit the sand after gliding in on baby waves. The sound the water makes when the whales slap the ocean with their tails and fins and the eerie, magical songs heard under the water from these huge mammals communicating down the coast. Spouts generate sounds whether it is a blowhole made from traveling whales or from underwater lava tunnels. The nibbles we can hear from the parrot fish eating their meal from the coral reef. Hearing the washboard when the surf leaves black sand beach and jostles and smoothes all the lava pebbles on its downward journey. The difference in sound our paddles make from the kayak it moves through the water. The sound of the wind moving through the trees and recognizing the rustling palm fronds from the banana trees. The rapture of standing inside a dense bamboo forest when the wind kicks up and hearing all the chimes chant, simultaneously. The vocals of a strong winter Kona storm and the sounds of fruit falling on the roof and the breaking of eucalyptus tree branches before crashing down. The sing song of the Hawaiian language. It is a language made up of vowels with a sprinkling of consonants and I have learned that the secret in pronouncing this language is by sounding out every letter, even the silences in between the identical vowels. The state fish goes by the name of humuhumunukunukuapua’a and is that not a much more colorful sound than Hawaiian triggerfish which it is. Since 1949 until the present there has been a rightful gradual increase in promotion of this Austronesian language and a public Hawaiian language immersion started through the Puana Lea pre-schools in the 1980’s and continues on. It is a language which should not become lost.
The blow in the conch shell which heralds both the daily rising and setting sun. The Sunday drum circle and cycle at Makena beach which sets the tone for either the week’s ending or beginning. The flapping of wings heard while hiking through the misty crater floors and learning later they belong to ring-necked pheasants living there where not expected. The spitting and hissing from the Hawaiian monk seal whom I did not know was endangered and should immediately have granted her much needed rest. The sound of laughter we share with our friends while playing board games at night. The only television we have seen this past month was our new president’s inauguration and that has been good. Gecko’s chirps and I think back of the moment when I walked in our bathroom and saw this beautiful statue of a great lizard on a stack of towels and wondered who placed it there to please me, only to remember that no one but Tom and I walk in our bathroom and the statue was real. Tom gently carried the gecko outside. While in Hawaii I dress more like the natives and can often be seen in a sarong and tank top. Outfits I do not wear while in court in Faulkner County or at the CASA office. One morning while checking on the laundry outside on the lanai (porch) where often the washing/drying machines are found here, I met the weekly garbage pickup crew and while I was taking care of my job they were doing theirs and then I heard the whistle. I felt my ego soar. I am being whistled at, at my age, an age where I qualify for senior discounts. I truly must look hot in my Hawaiian outfit. The garbage men went on, and on down the street and over and over again I heard the whistle. Should one let go of the inflated ego feeling when realizing that the whistle is there only to let the truck driver know that the job is done and move on to the next ? Nay, hold on to that sound which makes you feel good..
The most cacophonic island sound happens at sunset when thousands of local mynah birds settle down at the same roosting tree for the night. The Banyan Tree in Lahaina shades more than two-thirds of an acre, measures nearly one-fourth of a mile in circumference and reaches upward to a height of 60 feet. The tree has spread over this area via aerial roots created by many caring members of the Lahaina community for over 12 decades. The Lahaina Banyan tree is the largest in the State of Hawaii and is a member of the fig family and originates from India. At every sundown, the tree comes alive with the raucous tunes of the island’s birds sharing their daily adventures and the sound is both deafening and thrilling for a short time before all becomes quiet with only an occasional peep heard.
We have loved our time in Maui, its sounds of all and now are ready to hop over to Honolulu early on Friday morning before departing for New Zealand later that night.
From now until we arrive in Greece the middle of May, Tom and I will be in new and never before chartered for us territory and we are ready and excited to move on.
Tot ziens Amerika ,
Tom and Els
Posted by tomstrick1 12:36 PM Archived in Round the World | USA Comments (0)

